Audio By Carbonatix
The Electoral Commission (EC) has defended its decision to use only the Ghana Card for the voter registration exercise, saying it is still valid and the surest way to rid the register of minors and foreigners.
According to the EC’s Director of Electoral Services, it is possible for eligible voters to get their Ghana Cards before the end of their registration on October 7, 2024.
Dr Serebour Quaicoe is confident that barring any unforeseen circumstances, every qualified voter can get their identity cards to be fully registered for the 2024 general elections within the next two years.
He believes no one would be disenfranchised because all Ghanaians have enough time to access the Ghana Card.
“Our decision is based on the assumption that by the time we close registration on the 7th of October 2024, any eligible voter would have registered so that one is still valid.
"The NIA has given us all the assurances that now that they have rolled out 291 registration centres, and we are also going to roll out 267 registration centres, the people will have their names on the Ghana Card.
“All the challenges will be rectified. They will get the card, they will come to our offices to register. Let’s throw this challenge; we have more than two years, and let’s give ourselves the end of 2023.
"If genuinely there are people who are not getting the card, then we can now be arguing the argument you are putting across,” he said on Newsfile on Saturday, September 24.
In the past weeks, there have been concerns about the EC’s decision to use only the Ghana Card as the sole document for the voter registration exercise, with some commentators and political analysts warning that the move would disenfranchise eligible voters.
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has also threatened to use legal means to prevent the EC from going ahead with its Ghana Card decision.
But the EC has debunked the assertions.
Dr Quaicoe stressed that it would only help to phase out the guarantor system which non-eligible persons have often exploited to get onto the voter register.
“It is part of our planning that we want to eliminate non-Ghanaians helping us to choose our leaders, which cannot be done anywhere. If you go to other countries, they all use their citizens’ cards,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
US Secret Service investigates reports of shots near White House
1 minute -
ECG injects GH¢3m into power upgrades across 40 Accra communities
10 minutes -
‘Owadiah’ makes history: William Opare becomes first Ghanaian to break 45 seconds in 400m
17 minutes -
Four Ada SHS students arrested after viral cutlass threat video sparks alarm
17 minutes -
Christopher Bonsu Baah win Staff Player of the Year award in debut season with Al Qadsiah
1 hour -
Laryea Kingston’s Uganda beat Ghana 8-7 on penalties to secure U-17 World Cup spot and extend Black Starlets’ absence to nine years
2 hours -
FIFA U17 World Cup playoffs: Uganda beat Black Starlets on penalties to qualify
2 hours -
2026 U17 WWCQ: Goalfest in Accra as Black Maidens hit Liberia for six
2 hours -
AyaSol initiative launched to support youth-led solar businesses in Ghana
3 hours -
Photos: e-Crime Bureau hosts inaugural Founder’s Opera Soirée on AI-driven cyber threats
3 hours -
World Corporate Golf Challenge Ghana officially launches 2026 season
3 hours -
Prof Gyampo Writes: Democracy, free speech and the survival of the Ghanaian polity
3 hours -
Nestlé Ghana, ECOM Ghana hand over 6-unit classroom block to Adarkwa Methodist Primary School
3 hours -
e-Crime Bureau hosts inaugural Founder’s Opera Soiree on AI-era leadership and cyber threats
3 hours -
Mahama rejects ‘kenkey and waakye party’ celebration after IMF exit, says economy still work in progress
3 hours